Udall Center
Fellows Program
a decade of policy scholarship 1990-2001
by Rober t Merideth, Robert G. Varady, and Kathleen Veslany
Udall Center
Fellows Program
a decade of policy scholarship 1990-2001
by Rober t Merideth, Robert G. Varady, and Kathleen Veslany
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Acknowledgments
The Udall Center is grateful to many individuals at The University of Arizona whose contributions over the years have made the Fellows program a success: Michael Cusanovich, former Vice President for Research and director of the Arizona Research Laboratories; Richard Powell, Vice President for Research; former Social and Behaviorial Sciences deans Lee Sigelman, Lawrence Scaff, Lynn Nadel, and especially Holly M. Smith; Lisa Graumlich and Jonathan Overpeck, former director and director, respectively, of the Institute for the Study of Planet Earth (ISPE); former Business & Public Affairs dean Kenneth Smith; and numerous faculty at the University who have served on the annual Fellows selection committees. The Center also thanks the Ford Foundation and Morris K. Udall Foundation for providing funds to support several visiting Fellows. The authors thank Jen McCormack and Kylie Dickman at the Udall Center who assisted in the preparation of this document, and Stephen Cornell, director of the Center, for his review and comments.
Authors
Robert Merideth is assistant director and editor-in-chief at the Udall Center. Robert G. Varady is the Center's deputy director and director of environmental programs. Kathleen Veslany is associate editor at the Center.
U d a l l Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
ISBN 1-931143-15-3 Layout and design: Kimi Eisele and Robert Merideth, assisted by Jen McCormack Published by the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy The University of Arizona 803 East First Street Tucson, AZ 85719 (520) 884-4393 - phone (520) 884-4702 - fax <udallcenter.arizona.edu> Copyright 2001 The Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of The University of Arizona All Rights Reserved
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
8 0 3 East First Street T h e University of Arizona Tu c s o n , AZ 85719 P h o n e (520) 844-4393 F a x (520) 884-4702 E m a i l : udallctr@u.arizona.edu udallcenter.arizona.edu We b site: udallcenter. a r i z o n a . e d u
S TA F F
S t e p h e n Cornell Director Cornell, Varady Robert G. Varady, Deputy Director and Director of Environmental Programs Robert Merideth Assistant Director & Editor-in-Chief Merideth, Sloan, Donna Sloan Senior Financial & Administrative Officer
Established in 1987, the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy at The University of Arizona sponsors policy-relevant, interdisciplinary research and forums that link scholarship and education with decisionmaking. The Center specializes in issues concerning environment, natural resources, and public lands; American Indian governance and economic development; the U.S.-Mexico border; and related topics.
Abraham, Kim Abraham Senior Office Specialist Manley A. Begay, Jr., Director, Native Nations Institute Begay, Jr. Brogden Mette Brogden, Program Manager, Environmental and Public Policy Conflict Resolution A n n e Bro w n i n g -A i ke n , Postdoctoral Fellow BrowningChiles, Emily Chiles Senior Office Specialist, Native Nations Institute Monica Dobrolecki Associate Accountant Dobrolecki, Joseph, Stephanie Joseph Office Manager Jorgensen, Miriam Jorgensen Assistant Director for Research, Native Nations Institute Loomis, Colleen Loomis Senior Office Specialist McCarther, Asya McCarther Database/Financial Systems Specialist Moreno, Denise Moreno Research Specialist Stephanie Rainie Senior Research Specialist Rainie, Sheeran, Thomas Sheeran Computer Analyst Timeche Joan Timeche , Assistant Director, Native Nations Institute Veslany K athleen Veslany , Associate Editor P r o g r a m Assistants/Associates: M e a g a n Cahill Meagan (Geography & Regional Development), Michelle Hale Michelle (Comparative Cultural & Literary Studies), Nathan Pryor Nathan (Geography & Regional Development), Ian Record Ian (American Indian Studies), Jennifer Shepherd (GeograJennifer phy & Regional Development), Rachel Starks (SociolRachel ogy), and Leah Stauber (Anthropology) Leah U n d e r g r a d u a t e Assistants: K y l i e Dickman (SociolKylie ogy), Jeremy Fergason (Computer Science), Megan Jeremy Fergason Megan Fernow (General Biology), Cecilia Granillo (Geography Cecilia & Regional Devleopment), Irene Hsiao (Journalism), Irene Jennifer Huff (Anthropology), Matt Lensch (English), Matt Lisa McClaren (Business), Lani Murphy (Accounting), Lani Kamille Thomas (Pharmacy), Tiffany Woody (Business Tiffany Management) Senior Policy Scholars: Kirk Emerson (U.S. Institute Kirk for Environmental Conflict Resolution), Kenneth Grant Kenneth Grant, (Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development), Maria Carmen Lemos (UA Center for Latin Maria American Studies), and Jonathan Taylor (Harvard Jonathan Taylor Project on American Indian Economic Development)
A m e r i c a n Indian Policy
Focuses on research, executive education, and outreach related to tribal self-governance, reservation economic development, natural resources and environmental issues, American Indian health, and aspects of relevant federal policy. The Center, through its Native Nations Institute, both initiates research projects of its own and responds to requests or commissions from Indian nations, the federal government, and other Indian and non-Indian organizations.
E n v i r o n m e n t a l Conflict Resolution
Emphasizes multistakeholder policy dialogues on contentious environmental issues. The Center facilitates such forums as the Arizona Common Ground Roundtable, develops and enacts role-play simulation games, sponsors training workshops on facilitation and mediation, and responds to requests and commissions for design and facilitation of policy dialogues and public participation processes.
U . S . - M e x i c o Border Environment
Involves research and outreach on policy related to transboundary water management; the role of public participation and specifically, post-NAFTA environmental institutions (BECC, NADB, and CEC); and issues of borderwide significance. The Center promotes democratization of decisionmaking in the border region through pioneering use of electronic discussion groups (BECCnet and CECnet), and organization of public forums and workshops.
E n v i r o n m e n t a l Policy in the West
Includes collaborative research and outreach on the policy dimensions of such issues as climatic change and variability in the Southwest, the use of spatial decision-support systems in roundtable stakeholder discussions, and water-resources allocation and use in the region.
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Background Background Fu n d i n g A p p l i c a t i o n and Selection Process P r o g r a m Growth D i s c i p l i n a r y Diversity C l u s t e r e d Research Themes M e a s u r e s of Success Biographies Publications
1 1 2 3 3 7 7 11 17
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Udall Center
Fellows Fellows Program
BACKGROUND
The University of Arizona (UA)'s Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy, established in 1987, is a unit within the Vice Presidency for Research. In support of its mission to link scholarship and education with decisionmaking, and consistent with an idea in its charter, the Center initiated a scholars-in-residence program during the 1990-91 academic year. The Udall Center Fellows program allows faculty members and researchers, with release from their teaching and other major responsibilities, to spend a semester at the Center--in historic, territorial-style buildings just west of the campus--to engage in research on any topic related to public policy. The Center provides Fellows with a private office in a setting conducive to productive research and offers some operational support for communications and supplies, clerical services, and use of the Center's resources. To date, the Center has hosted 85 Fellows from 29 departments at the UA, as well as five Fellows from outside the University.1 The success of this established program can be measured by the consistently high degree of interest shown by faculty members, the rich disciplinary diversity of Fellows, the extensive record of research publications produced by Fellows, and an established and active network of policy scholars at the UA and elsewhere.
FUNDING
A key to the Center's ability to implement and maintain such a program is the notion that this can be accomplished without the infusion of major external funds for stipends. This insight and the Center's subsequent strategy of tapping existing university resources took hold when it was endorsed by a number of deans, department heads, and other administrators at the UA. Each year since 1990 the program has been supported at relatively low cost to the Center--occasionally through such traditional arrangements as sabbatical leaves and external funds, but mainly through modest stipends paid to the Fellows' home departments for teaching replacement costs. When a fellowship coincides with a sabbatical, there is no need for additional resources; over the years, sabbaticals have been one mode of support, accounting for perhaps 10 percent of the Fellows. Another model, used on a few occasions, is for faculty members to pay for their own teaching-replacement costs through grants they may control.
In 1997, the Fellows program, with support from the Morris K. Udall Foundation, included visiting scholars from outside the UA with interest in environmental conflict resolution. And in 1998, with funding from the Ford Foundation, the program added a fellowship to support public-policy research pertaining to the U.S.-Mexico border environment.
1
"The fellowship came at a great time in my career and enabled me to pursue uninterruptedly my research and writing in an environment that was both pleasant and stimulating. I think the fellowships are a wonderful gift to the faculty that repay the Udall Center and the University in so many impor tant ways."
Sallie Marston Professor and Head, Geography and Regional Development (Udall Center Fellow, 1990-91)
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Nearly all the rest, however, are made possible by stipends. Sometimes deans provide these payments; at other times, department heads allocate resources internally. Since 1995, the Udall Center itself has been able to offer a few such stipends (on the order of $5,000 each) to departments via an agreement with the UA's Vice President for Research. In one special arrangement, several science and policy Fellows have been sponsored by the University's Institute for the Study of Planet Earth (ISPE), which has provided stipends for faculty members in science and engineering disciplines who want to work on public policy issues. Finally, in a few cases, the Center has obtained limited external funding--to date from the Ford Foundation and Morris K. Udall Foundation--to support Fellows from outside the UA focused on specific policy topics. In these instances, the stipends have been larger (in the range of $15,000 to $25,000) and paid directly to the Fellows to defray their temporary living costs and related expenses.
"The fellowship was a wonderful way for me to pursue my own research without interruptions or demands on my time. The Center is located just close enough to campus so that the library is accessible, but far enough away to limit day-to-day distractions."
Edella Schlager Associate Professor, Public Administration and Policy (Udall Center Fellow, 1994-95)
A P P L I C AT I O N AND SELECTION PROCESS
The application and selection process is straightforward. Early each spring semester, the Center issues a call for applications to department heads and directors, and invites potentially interested policy scholars to apply. Applicants are asked to submit: (1) a brief statement describing general policy research interests; (2) plans for a specific project to be undertaken as a Udall Center Fellow; (3) description of any specific proposals already submitted or to be submitted for external support for the project; (4) a curriculum vitae; and (5) a letter of support from the department head or dean, plus a letter of reference. Applicants also are asked to indicate a semester preference for the year to which they are applying for a fellowship. A small peer-review committee comprising former Fellows or members of the Udall Center's faculty advisory committee reviews the applications and meets late in the spring to select the Fellows for the upcoming year. The committee ranks the applicants and submits the names to the Center director. Based on the
F i g u r e 1. Number of Fellows (cumulative by year)
90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
90-91 91-92 92-93 93-94 94-95 95-96 96-97 97-98 98-99 99-00 00-01 01-02
2
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
F i g u r e 2. Number of Fellows (per year)
14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0
90-91 91-92 92-93 93-94 94-95 95-96 96-97 97-98 98-99 99-00 00-01 01-02
availability of funding and office space, the director and senior Center staff match these options with the top-ranked applicants. Successful candidates are notified of their selection soon after the committee has met. As a condition of the award, incoming Fellows are required to sign a residency statement in which they agree to work at the Center and to participate in a luncheon-seminar series. Fellows' residencies typically coincide with the academic semester calendars (AugustDecember or January-May).
P R O G R A M GROWTH
As mentioned earlier, in the program's 12 years, 85 UA faculty members and five non-UA scholars have been named Udall Center Fellows. Since the initial year of 1990-91, the rate of growth in the number of Fellows rose steadily until it peaked in 1996-97 with the naming of 13 Fellows (Figure 1). Since that time, the Center has limited the number of invitees because of space constraints. Beginning in the 1999-2000 academic year, the Center limited the program to four or five Fellows per year (Figure 2). Given the size of the UA and the continued infusion of new faculty with interests in public policy, the pool of policy scholars seems to be continually replenished.
D I S C I P L I N A R Y DIVERSITY
The disciplinary mix of Fellows has changed over the years (Table 1). During the program's initial four years (1990-91 to 1993-94), one college at the UA, Social and Behavioral Sciences (SBS), contributed predominantly, providing two-thirds of the Fellows. The College of Business and Public Administration (BPA) also featured prominently during the program's initial years. Overall, SBS and BPA together have been responsible for sending to the Center more than 70 percent of the Fellows from the UA. Beginning in the program's second year, the disciplinary diversity of the Fellows-- as measured by the number of participating UA colleges and departments (Table 2)--grew noticeably. In the 12 years of the program, 29 departments in 10 colleges have sent faculty members as Fellows to the Udall Center.
"My experience as a Udall Center Fellow broadened my horizons about what can be achieved through systematic effor t and a good work environment; but above all, it opened for me new perspectives for linking scientific research with the search for solutions to societal problems."
Basilio Verduzco Investigator, University of Guadalajara, Mexico (Udall Center/Ford Foundation Fellow, 1998-99)
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Ta b l e 1. Udall Fellows by Academic Ye a r Year
2001-2002
Depar tment
History Political Science Anthropology Geography and Regional Development Renewable Natural Resources History Sociology Public Administration and Policy History Philosophy History Political Science History Near Eastern Studies Hydrology and Water Resources Political Science Anthropology Hydrology and Water Resources Political Science Depar tment of Geography and Planning Instituto de Estudios Economicos y Regionales Women's Studies/Geography and Regional Development Materials Science and Engineering Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics Sociology Public Administration and Policy Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Philosophy Center for Public Policy Dispute Resolution Ohio Comm. on Dispute Res. and Conflict Management Depar tments of Speech Communication and Forest Resources History Sociology Geography and Regional Development Philosophy Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research Management and Policy Higher Education Hydrology and Water Resources Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology Geography and Regional Development Sociology Arizona State Museum Pediatrics
C o l l e g e or Institution 1
Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Agricultural and LIfe Sciences4 Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Engineering Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Engineering Social and Behavioral Sciences West Chester University, PA University of Guadalajara, Mexico Social and Behavioral Sciences Engineering Engineering Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Science Social and Behavioral Sciences Univ. of Texas School of Law, Austin Oregon State Univ., Corvallis Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Science Business and Public Administration Education Engineering Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Vice Presidency for Research Medicine
Linda Darling Suzanne Dovi Linda Green Beth Mitchneck J.E. de Steiguer1
2000-2001 Richard Eaton Don Grant III H. Brinton Milward Laura Tabili 1999-2000 Allen Buchanan Julia Clancy-Smith John Garcia Katherine Morrissey Charles Smith 1998-99 Mar tha Conklin1 David N. Gibbs Alice Schlegel W. James Shuttleworth1 David Wilkins
F r o m other institutions Christopher Brown2 Basilio Verduzco2
1997-98 Susan L. Craddock Jennifer Croissant1 Kevin Lansey1 Calvin Morrill Keith G. Provan Michael Rosenzweig1 David Schmidtz
F r o m other institutions Andrew Bowman3 Chris Carlson3 Gregg Walker3
1996-97 Karen Anderson Elisabeth Clemens Andrew Comrie1 Alvin I. Goldman Lisa Graumlich1 Ken Koput Larry Leslie Thomas Maddock III1 Thomas McGuire Gordon Mulligan Walter Powell Thomas Sheridan Benjamin Wilfond
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
1995-96 Roger Bales1 Adele Barker Alber t Bergesen Lucien Duckstein1 Leslie Eldenburg Roger Fox Barbara Gutek Laura McCloskey Ronald L. Oaxaca Gary Rhoades 1994-95 Victor R. Baker1 Dennis Cory Janet R. Jakobsen Douglas McAdam Amnon Rapoport Edella Schlager John Schwartz Sheila A. Slaughter 1993-94 Susan Gonzalez Baker Thomas Christiano Deborah Mathieu Susan Philips David A. Snow Soroosh Sorooshian Thomas Weaver 1992-93 Chris C. Demchak Tamra Pearson d'Estrée Michael Hechter Keith Lehrer Roger L. Nichols Lynn Smith-Lovin Douglas Weiner Ervin Zube 1991-92 Allen Buchanan Bonnie Colby Paula England Debra Friedman Roger C. Henderson Bernard P. Herber Bernard Jaworski Bruce Sales Michael Schaller 1990-91 Lawton Burns James C. Cox Andrew Kirby Sallie Marston
Hydrology and Water Resources Comparative and Cultural Literary Studies Sociology Systems and Industrial Engineering Accounting Agricultural and Resource Economics Management and Policy Psychology Economics Higher Education Geosciences Agricultural and Resource Economics Women's Studies Sociology Management and Policy Public Administration and Policy Political Science Higher Education Public Administration and Policy Philosophy Political Science Anthropology Sociology Hydrology and Water Resources Anthropology Public Administration and Policy Psychology Sociology Philosophy History Sociology History Renewable Natural Resources Philosophy Agricultural and Resource Economics Sociology Sociology Law Economics Marketing Psychology History Management and Policy Economics Geography and Regional Development Geography and Regional Development
Engineering Humanities Social and Behavioral Sciences Engineering Business and Public Administration Agriculture Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Education Science Agriculture Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Education Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Engineering Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Agriculture Social and Behavioral Sciences Agriculture Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Law Business and Public Administration Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences s Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Business and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences
Science and policy Fellow supported by the UA Institute for the Study of Planet Earth (ISPE) U.S.-Mexico border environment Fellow supported by the Ford Foundation 3 Environmental conflict resolution Fellow supported by the Morris K. Udall Environmental 4 Formerly, the College of Agriculture
1 2
5
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Ta b l e 2. Disciplinar y Diversity of the UA Udall Center Fe l l o w s * Disciplinary Fellows UA College Social and Behavioral Sciences Business and Public Administration Engineering Agricultural and Life Sciences Science Education Humanities Law Medicine Vice Presidency for Research Fellows 48 14 8 5 3 3 1 1 1 1 ___ ___ 85 Depar t m e n t s / U n i t s 10 5 4 2 3 1 1 1 1 1 ___ 29
*
In addition, five Fellows have come from five external institutions.
A large part of the disciplinary diversity results from the science and policy Fellows supported by the UA's Institute for the Study of Planet Earth (ISPE). Since 1994-95, ISPE has sponsored 12 Fellows from nine departments, including Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Geography and Regional Development, Geosciences, Hydrology and Water Resources, Materials Science and Engineering, Renewable Natural Resources, Systems and Industrial Engineering, and the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. Five additional Fellows have come to the Center from as many outside institutions, including the Center for Public Policy Dispute Resolution (Texas), Ohio Commission on Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management, Oregon State University, University of Guadalajara (Mexico), and West Chester University (Pennsylvania).
Fellows Table 3. Re s e a r c h Themes of Udall Center Fe l l o w s able Theme Environmental and natural resources policy Women, minorities, and indigenous peoples Health and human development Theory of democracy and institutions Conflict resolution and decisionmaking Economic development Science, technology, and society Projects with international or multinational focus
**
Number of Fellows ** 30 20 14 12 10 10 8 20
Some Fellows' research themes are counted in multiple categories.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
C L U S T E R E D RESEARCH THEMES
As this disciplinary diversity might suggest, the 90 Fellows (UA and external) include social and physical scientists, agricultural scientists, conflict-resolution specialists, humanists, education scholars, engineers, a lawyer, and a physician. Their academic and professional research interests have fallen naturally into seven sets of themes (Table 3). The largest research clusters have been in the areas of environment and natural resources; women, minorities, and indigeneous peoples; health and human development; and the theory of democracy and institutions, with smaller clusters in the themes of conflict resolution and decisionmaking, economic development, and science-and-technology policy. And across these seven themes, the focus of research for 20 of the Fellows has been on international or multinational policy issues.
M E A S U R E S OF SUCCESS
An indication of the program's influence is the number of publications--nearly 160 books, chapters, journal articles, and other scholarly works--attributed by Fellows to have been initiated, completed, or inspired by their fellowships. The "Publications" in the appendix also attest to the intellectual diversity Fellows share among colleagues in different disciplines within the public policy arena. The Udall Center Fellows luncheon-seminar series, to which all Fellows contribute, is attended by current and former Fellows and other interested members of the academic community, representing an extremely eclectic collection of disciplines and professions. The resulting events--nearly 100 such seminars--have provided an ongoing forum for the presentation and critique of important public policy research at the University, among scholars in a variety of fields who might otherwise seldom come into contact with each other. Perhaps the most significant outcome for the Center, though, has been the formation of a cadre of policy scholars at the UA with whom to develop and sustain collaborative research and outreach projects, particularly related to the Center's interests in environmental policy and American Indian policy. Over the years the relationships formed between Fellows and Udall Center staff have led to numerous interdisciplinary activities and have provided an invaluable intellectual foundation to support the Center's mission. In addition, many Fellows provide service to the Center as members of various research and outreach committees. For example, Fellows presently comprise nearly half of the Center's 22-member faculty advisory committee.
"The opportunity to work one-on-one with specialists in policy was unique in my experience. It has profoundly changed my attitude to the hydrological science field in which I work and was the basis for my interest in developing the new international initiative `Hydrology for the Environment, Life, and Policy (HELP)'. After my experience, I doubt if I will ever do science that is not policy-relevant."
James Shuttleworth Professor, Hydrology and Water Resources (Udall Center/ISPE Science and Policy Fellow, 1998-99)
With the Fellows Program now in its second decade, the Udall Center anticipates continuing prosperity and synergy as new Fellows bring their intellectual curiosity and research programs to the Center.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
BIOGRAPHIES
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
B I O G R A P H I E S OF UDALL CENTER FELLOWS
K aren S. Anderson (1996-97), Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: Policy Implications of School Desegregation Crisis in Little Rock, Arkansas, 1954-1964 Roger C. Bales1 (1995-96), Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: Climate Change in Alpine Areas and the Effects on Water Resources in Arid Regions Baker Victor R. Baker1 (1994-95), Regents Professor, Head of Hydrology and Water Resources, Professor of Geosciences and of Planetary Sciences, The University of Arizona. Project: The Role of Experience-based Science in Relating Science and Society Susan Gonzalez Baker (1993-94), Associate Professor of Sociology, The University of Texas at Austin (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor, School of Public Administration and Policy, The University of Arizona). Project: The Role of Immigrants and Immigrant Community-Advocacy Groups in Effecting Real Change in Immigrant Lives Adele M. Barker (1995-96), Associate Professor of Russian and Slavic Languages and of Comparative Cultural and Literary Studies, The University of Arizona. Project: Relationship Between Soviet Public Policy and Female-authored Literary Texts Albert J. Bergesen (1995-96), Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona. Project: Backlash Politics: Reactions to Recent Latino Immigration Andrew Bowman2 (1997-98), General Counsel, Texas Windpower (at the time of the fellowship, with the Center for Public Policy Dispute Resolution, University of Texas School of Law, Austin). Project: Specific and Practical Ways for Local Governments to Better Address Certain Recurring Policy Dilemmas Through Public Policy Dispute Resolution Techniques Christopher Brown3 (1998-99), Assistant Professor of Geography, New Mexico State University (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor of Geography and Planning, West Chester University, PA). Project: The Potential for a Binational Consejo to Address Environmental Conflict within the Santa Cruz River Basin Allen E. Buchanan (1991-92, 1999-2000), Professor of , Philosophy, The University of Arizona. Projects: Ethical Concerns in Mapping the Human Genome. Indigenous Peoples' Rights, and National Minorities' Rights: A Critical Comparison of Two Normative Discourses
Science and policy Fellow supported by the UA's Institute for the Study of Planet Earth (ISPE) 2 Environmental conflict resolution Fellow supported by the Morris K. Udall Foundation 3 U.S.-Mexico border environment Fellow supported by the Ford Foundation
1
Lawton R. Burns (1990-91). Professor of Health Care Systems and Management, and Director, Wharton Center for Health Management and Economics, University of Pennsylvania (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor of Management and Policy, The University of Arizona). Project: Discrepancies in Access, Quality, and Cost Provided by Arizona Hospitals to Patients Chris Carlson2 (1997-98), Co-director, Policy Consensus Initiative, Santa Fe, NM (at the time of the fellowship, with the Ohio Commission on Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management). Project: An Examination of How Political Leaders Have Used Conflict Resolution Tools to Work Out Agreements Over Controversial Issues Thomas D. Christiano (1993-94), Associate Professor of Philosophy, The University of Arizona. Project: How to Evaluate and Define Democratic Institutions Julia A. Clancy-Smith (1999-2000), Associate Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: Migrations: Trans-Mediterranean Settlements in North Africa and France Elisabeth S. Clemens (1996-97), Associate Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona. Project: The Pragmatics of Institutional Change: Reconstructing and Deconstructing the American Welfare State Bonnie G. Colby (1991-92), Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Economic Impacts of Reallocating Agricultural Water Supplies to Other Uses During Drought Years, Mitigating Water Shortages in Urban Areas and Steamflows for Wildlife and Recreation Andrew C. Comrie1 (1996-97), Associate Professor of Geography and Regional Development, The University of Arizona. Project: Overcoming Sparse Climate Data in the U.S.-Mexico Border Region Martha H. Conklin1 (1998-99), Associate Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: Detecting Water Quality Responses to Climate Change, with an Emphasis on GLOBE and Other Volunteer Monitoring Programs Dennis C. Cory (1994-95), Department Head and Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Water Quality Regulations in Arizona James C. Cox (1990-91), Professor of Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Lease Auctions Susan L. Craddock (1997-98), Assistant Professor of Women's Studies, University of Minnesota (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor of Women's Studies and of Geography and Regional Development, The University of Arizona). Project: Health Policy and the Lessons of History
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Jennifer L. Croissant1 (1997-98), Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, The University of Arizona. Project: Engineering Design and People with Disabilities: Social Movements, Public Policies, and Research Practices Linda T. Darling (2001-2002), Associate Professor of T. History, The University of Arizona. Project: Indigenous Relationships Between Middle Eastern Governments and Their People in Contemporary Policymaking Chris C. Demchak (1992-93), Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: An Examination of the Military Organizations in Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Israel, Poland, and the former Czechoslovakia Suzanne Dovi (2001-2002), Assistant Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona. Project: The Legitimacy of Public Policy Advocates and the Accountability Between Advocates and Historially Disadvantaged Groups Lucien Duckstein1 (1995-96), Professor Emeritus of Systems and Industrial Engineering, The University of Arizona. Project: Multiobjective Decision-Making Applied to Water and Natural Resources Richard M. Eaton (2000-2001), Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: Public Policy and the History of India Leslie G. Eldenburg (1995-96), Associate Professor of Accounting, The University of Arizona. Project: Health Care Reimbursement and Regulatory Policies and Their Effects on Provision of Health Care Services Paula England (1991-92), Professor of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania (at the time of the fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: How Institutions, Social Networks, and Cultural Norms Affect Outcomes of Interest to Policymakers Pearson Tamra Pearson d'Estrée (1992-93), Associate Professor of Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University (at the time of fellowship, Assistant Professor of Psychology, The University of Arizona). Project: Techniques of Resolving Disputes Over Water Rights W. Fox Roger W. Fox (1995-96), Professor Emeritus of Agricultural and Resource Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Policy Issues Related to Indian-owned Gambling in Arizona Friedman Debra Friedman (1991-92), Associate Provost for Academic Planning, The University of Washington (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: Institutional Design, Incentives, and Child Custody Laws
John A. Garcia (1999-2000), Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona. Project: Alternative Voting Systems for Local Governments: The Case of Cumulative Voting and Minority Communities David N. Gibbs (1998-99), Associate Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona. Project: International Peacekeeping, Humanitarian Intervention, and National Self-Interest Alvin I. Goldman (1996-97), Regents Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science, The University of Arizona. Project: Social Epistemology: The Role of Information in the Electoral Process Don S. Grant III (2000-2001), Associate Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona. Project: The Influence of Organizational Structure on Industry's Toxic Emissions Lisa Graumlich1 (1996-97), Professor of Land Research and Environmental Science, and Director of the Mountain Research Center, Montana State University (at the time of fellowship, Associate Professor, Laboratory of Tree Ring Research, and Director, Institute for the Study of Planet Earth, The University of Arizona). Project: Social Drivers of Land-Use Change in Hindu Kush-Himalaya Linda Green (2001-2002), Assistant Professor of Anthropology, The University of Arizona. Project: Inequality in Health Care Policy and Tuberculosis Cases Among Alaska Natives Barbara A. Gutek (1995-96), McClelland Professor of Management and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: Sexual Harassment and Work Environment Michael Hechter (1992-93), Professor of Sociology, The University of Washington (at the time of fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: The Source and Variation in Values Related to Quality of Life Roger C. Henderson (1991-92), Professor of Law, The University of Arizona. Project: Legal Issues Surrounding Accident Compensation Reform in Arizona P. Bernard P. Herber (1991-92), Professor Emeritus of Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Economic and Efficiency Issues that Arise in Cases of Transnational Atmospheric Pollution, Global Warming, and Ozone Layer Depletion Janet R. Jakobsen (1994-95), Director of the Barnard Center for Research on Women, Barnard College (at the time of the fellowship, Assistant Professor of Women's Studies, The University of Arizona). Project: Gender Stereotypes
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Bernard Jaworski (1991-92), Professor of Marketing, University of Southern California (at the time of the fellowship, Associate Professor of Marketing, The University of Arizona). Project: How State Agencies Monitor Business-Related Developments and Devise Strategies to Attract and Maintain Firms Within the State Andrew Kirby (1990-91), Professor of Social Science and Director, M. A. Interdisciplinary Studies Program, Arizona State University West (formerly Professor of Geography and Regional Development, The University of Arizona). Project: Spatial Distribution of Federal Expenditures in United States Border Counties Kenneth W. Koput (1996-97), Associate Professor of W. Management and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: The Role of Elite Sponsorship in Biotechnology's Emergence Kevin E. Lansey1 (1997-98), Associate Professor of Civil Engineering & Engineering Mechanics, The University of Arizona. Project: Development of Techniques for Examining the Effect of Climate Change on Urban Water Resources Planning Keith E. Lehrer (1992-93), Regents Professor of Philosophy, The University of Arizona. Project: An Interactive, Dynamic Model of Consensus Development Larry L. Leslie (1996-97), Vice Dean for Academic Affairs of Education and Professor of Higher Education, The University of Arizona. Project: The Effects of Changes in Institutional Revenue Patterns Upon Undergraduate Education Within Science, Math, and Engineering (SME) Units of U.S. Public Research Universities Thomas Maddock, III1 (1996-97), Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: Policy Aspects of Changing Definitions of Surface Water and Groundwater in the West Sallie A. Marston (1990-91), Department Head and Professor of Geography and Regional Development, The University of Arizona. Project: The Nature of Community Response to Economic and Spatial Changes in the Southwest Deborah R. Mathieu (1993-94), Associate Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona. Project: The Role of Policymakers and the State in Preventing Prenatal Fetal Harm McAdam Douglas McAdam (1994-95), Professor of Sociology, Stanford University (at the time of the fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: Comparison of Social Movements in Europe (the EC) and in the United States and Mexico (NAFTA) Laura McCloskey (1995-96), Associate Professor of Maternal and Child Health, Harvard University (at the time of the fellowship, Associate Professor of Psychology, The University of Arizona). Project: Family Violence and Moral Theory
Thomas R. McGuire (1996-97), Associate Research Anthropologist for the Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology. Project: The Implementation of Indian Water Settlements in the Southwest H. Brinton Milward (2000-2001), McClelland Professor of Public Management, The University of Arizona. Project: The Evolution of Community Mental Health Systems Under Conditions of Managed Care Beth Mitchneck (2001-2002), Associate Dean, College Beth of Social and Behavioral Sciences, and Associate Professor of Geography and Regional Development. Project: The Nature of Spatially Variable Governance and Local Economic Development in the Russian Federation Calvin K. Morrill (1997-98), Professor of Sociology, University of California, Irvine (at the time of the fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: The Emergence of the International Environmental Conflict Resolution Field Katherine G. Morrissey (1999-2000), Associate Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: The Nature of Conflict F. Gordon F. Mulligan (1996-97), Professor of Geography and Regional Development, The University of Arizona. Project: An Economic Typology of U.S. Counties Roger L. Nichols (1992-93), Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: Contrasting Experiences of Native-Americans in the United States and Canada Ronald L. Oaxaca (1995-96), Professor of Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Econometric Models of Decisionmaking and the Labor Market: Comparing Women and Minorities to Majority Males Susan U. Philips (1993-94), Professor of Anthropology, The University of Arizona. Project: The Language of Conflict Management in the Colonial Court System of the Pacific Island of Tonga W. Powell Walter W. Powell (1996-97), Professor of Education and of Sociology, Stanford University (at the time of the fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: Biotechnological Product Development and Regulatory Policy Keith G. Provan (1997-98), Professor of Public Administration and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: Behavioral Health Funding and Policy Issues for Native Americans Amnon Rapoport (1994-95), Karl Eller Professor of Management and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: Interactive Decisionmaking Gary D. Rhoades (1995-96), Department Head and Professor of Higher Education, The University of Arizona. Project: The U.S. Government and Academic Science and Technology Policy
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Michael L. Rosenzweig1 (1997-98), Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Arizona. Project: Reconciliation Ecology--Rationale and Prospects Bruce D. Sales (1991-92), Professor of Psychology, The University of Arizona. Project: Standards of Practice in Health Care Michael Schaller (1991-92), Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: How U.S. Policy Towards Japan After WWII Helped to Bring a Rise in Japan's Power Edella Schlager (1994-95), Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy, The University of Arizona. Project: Local Governance of Natural Resources Alice E. Schlegel (1998-99), Professor of Anthropology, The University of Arizona. Project: Apprenticeships: An Answer to the Social and Vocational Needs of Adolescents David J. Schmidtz (1997-98), Professor of Philosophy and of Economics, The University of Arizona. Project: Environmental Conflict Resolution in the West John E. Schwarz (1994-95), Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona. Project: Economic Opportunity in the United States Thomas E. Sheridan (1996-97), Curator of Ethnohistory, Arizona State Museum, and Professor of Anthropology, The University of Arizona. Project: The Political Ecology of Ranching in Arizona and Sonora W. James Shuttleworth1 (1998-99), Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: Well-Made Water-Related Public Policy Requires a Second International Hydrologic Decade Sheila A. Slaughter (1994-95), Professor of Higher Education, The University of Arizona. Project: Universities and Markets Charles D. Smith (1999-2000), Professor of Near Eastern Studies, The University of Arizona. Project: The Roots of Arab Grievances in the Arab-Israeli Conflict: The Discourse of Imperialism in British Policy and Historical Scholarship on the Subject Lynn Smith-Lovin D. Lynn Smith-Lovin (1992-93), Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona. Project: Using Affect-Control Theory to Investigate the Relationship Between Identity, Emotion, and Action David A. Snow (1993-94), Professor of Sociology, University of California, Irvine (at the time of the fellowship, Professor of Sociology, The University of Arizona). Project: The Issue of Agency of Homeless People: Theoretical and Policy Implications
Soroosh Sorooshian (1993-94), Regents Professor of Hydrology and Water Resources and Professor of Systems and Industrial Engineering, The University of Arizona. Project: The Impact of Climate Changes on Arid and Semiarid Regions J. E. de Steiguer1 (2001-2002), Professsor and Chair of the Watershed Program, School of Renewable Natural Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: Mitigating Potential for Global Environmental Change Damage to Natural Resources Located on Federal Lands of the American West Through Public Policy Tabili Laura Tabili (2000-2001), Associate Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: Workers Without Borders: Outsiders and Insiders in an Industrial Society, 1850-1939 Verduzco Basilio Verduzco3 (1998-99), Instituto de Estudios Economicos y Regionales, University of Guadalajara, Mexico. Project: Policymakers and Public Participation on the U.S.-Mexico Border Walk Gregg B. Walker2 (1997-98), Associate Professor and Chair, Speech Communication, and Adjunct Professor of Forest Resources, Oregon State University, Corvallis. Project: Collaboration and Multi-party Negotiation in Environmental Conflicts: Two Research Ideas Weaver Thomas Weaver (1993-94), Professor of Anthropology, The University of Arizona. Project: Impacts of the World Bank Loan Development Policy in Durango and Chihuahua Regions of Northern Mexico on Indigenous Peoples, the Forestry Industry, and Forest Exploitation Weiner Douglas R. Weiner (1992-93), Associate Professor of History, The University of Arizona. Project: The History of the Soviet Conservation Movement Through the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s Benjamin S. Wilfond (1996-97), Head of Bioethics Research Section, National Human Genome Research Institute (formerly Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, The University of Arizona). Project: Policy Implications of the NIH Cancer Genetic Studies Consortium Projects David Wilkins (1998-99), Associate Professor of American Indian Studies, of Political Science, and of Law, University of Minnesota (at the time of the fellowship, Associate Professor of Political Science, The University of Arizona). Project: Indigenous Politics and the American Political System Ervin H. Zube (1992-93), Professor Emeritus of Renewable Natural Resources, The University of Arizona. Project: The Changing Definition of National Parks in the United States
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
P U B L I C AT I O N S
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
UDALL P U B L I C AT I O N S BY UD A L L CENTER FELLOWS*
AT UDALL FELLOWS B O O K S , JOURNAL ARTICLES, AND OTHER SCHOL A R L Y WORKS AT T R I B U T E D BY UDA L L CENTER FELL O W S HAVE INITIATED, FELLOWSHIP T O HA V E BEEN INITIAT E D , COMPLETED, OR INSPIRED BY THEIR FELL O W S H I P.
Bales, R., B. Morehouse, and D. Liverman (1999): "CliR. mate Assessment Project for the Southwest." Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers, Water Resources Planning and Management National Conference, Phoenix, AZ. V. Baker, V. R. (1996a): "The Geological Approach to Understanding the Environment." GSA Today 6(3), 41-3. V. Baker, V. R. (1996b): "Geomorphology and Global Habitability." Geomorphology and the Changing Environment in Europe: Plenary Papers of the European Regional Conference of the International Association of Geomorphologists, Budapest, Hungary: Hungarian Academy of Sciences. V. Baker, V. R. (1996c): "Modeling Global Change: Why Geologists Should Not Let `System' Come Between Earth and Science." GSA Today 6(5), 8-11. V. Baker, V. R. (1998): "Hydrological Understanding and Societal Action." Journal of the American Water Resources Association 34(4), 819-25. A., Barker, A. ed. (1999): Consuming Russia: Popular Culture, Sex, and Society Since Gorbachev. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. A., B a r ke r, A. and J. Gheith, eds. (2001): A History of Women's Writing in Russia. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Beck, C. J., B. D. Sales and R. K. Haan (1993a): "Is SelfSales, B. representation a Reasonable Alternative to Attorney Representation in Divorce Cases?" St. Louis University Law Journal (Health Law Symposium) 37(3), 553-605. Beck, C., B. Sales and R. Haan (1993b): Self-RepresentaB. Sales, tion in Divorce Cases. Chicago, IL: American Bar Association. Bella, A., L. Duckstein and F. Szidarovszky (1996): "A L. Duckstein, Multicriterion Analysis of the Water Allocation Conflict in the Upper Rio Grande River Basin." Applied Mathematics and Computation 77(2-3), 245-65. Bella, A., F. Szidarovszky, and L. Duckstein (1996): "An L. Algorithm for Dynamic Negotiations." Southwest Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics 2, 1-15. Benjamin, G. A. H., and B. D. Sales (1992a): "CompreB. hensive Lawyer Assistance Programs: Justification and Model." Law and Psychology Review 16, 113-36.
Benjamin, G. A. H., and B. D. Sales (1992b): "Lawyer B. Psychopathology: Development, Prevalence, and Intervention." Law and Psychology: The Broadening of the Discipline (ed: J. R. P. Ogloff) Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press. Bogardi, I., A. Bardossy, and L. Duckstein (1996): "ConL. flict Analysis Using Multiple Criteria Decision Making Under Uncertainty." Transboundary Water Resources Management: Institutional and Engineering Approaches. 2d ed. Vol. 7. (eds: J. Ganoulis, L. Duckstein, P Literathy, and I. . Bogardi) Heidelberg, Germany: NATO ASI Series, pp. 13962. Brock, D., A. Buchanan, N. Daniels, and D. Wekler, eds. (2000): From Chance to Choice: Genetics and Justice. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Buchanan, A. (1993): "Genetic Intervention and Equality of Opportunity." Social Philosophy and Policy 12(2), 23357. Budescu, D. V., A. Rapoport, and R. Suleiman (1995): A. Rapoport "Common Pool Resource Dilemmas Under Uncertainty: Qualitative Tests of Equilibrium Solutions." Games and Economic Behavior 10, 171-201. Budescu, D. V., R. Suleiman, and A. Rapoport (1995): A. Rapoport "Positional Order and Group Size Effects in Resource Dilemma Games with Uncertain Resources." Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 61, 225-238. Carlson, C. (1999): "Convening." The Consensus Building Handbook (eds: L. Susskind, S. McKearnan, and J. Thomas-Larmer). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, pp. 169-97. Checchio, E., and Colby, B. (1993): Indian Water Rights: Colby, Negotiating the Future. Tucson, AZ: Water Resources Research Center, The University of Arizona. T. Christiano, T. (1994): "Democratic Equality and the Problem of Persistent Minorities." Philosophical Papers 23(3), 169-90. T. Christiano, T. (1995a): "Deliberate Equality and Democratic Order." Political Order NOMOS XXXVIII (ed: I. Shapiro) New York, NY: New York University Press. T. Christiano, T. (1995b): "Voting and Democracy." Canadian Journal of Philosophy. 25(3), 395-414 T. Christiano, T. (1996): The Rule of the Many: Fundamental Issues in Democratic Theory. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
*Fellows names are in bold; occasionally citations include multiple fellows.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Clancy-Smith, J. (2000a): "l'École Rue du Pacha, Tunis: L'Enseignement de la Femme Arabe et `la Plus Grande' France." CLIO. (ed: L. Auslander) Toulouse, France: University of Toulouse Press. Clancy-Smith, J. (2000b): "Migrations: Europe and Its Social Marginals in 19th-Century North Africa." The Shifting Boundaries of Marginality in the Middle East. (ed: E. Rogan) New York, NY: SUNY Press. Clemens, E. (1997): The People's Lobby: Organizational Innovation and the Rise of Interest Group Politics in the United States, 1890-1925. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Colby, B. (1991a): Economic Considerations in Protecting Third Party Rights. Chicago, IL: American Law Institute of the American Bar Association. Colby, B. (1991b): "Preparing for Water Rights Negotiations: An Overview of Tribal Water Leasing Opportunities." Reservation Economies, 29-37. Colby, B. (1991c): "Recent Trends in Southwestern Water Values." Appraisal Journal 59, 488-96. Colby, B. K. Crandall, & K. Rait (1992): "Valuing Riparian B., Preserves: A Southwestern Case Study." Rivers 3, 88-98. B., Colby, B. T. Daniel, and W. Shaw (1992): "The Values of Arizona's Environment." (ed: R. Varady) Preserving Arizona's Environmental Heritage. Phoenix, AZ: Arizona Town Hall. Comrie, A. (1998): "Mapping the Climatology of Ozone Potential for the U.S-Mexico Border Region." Journal of the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science 31(1), 1-12. A., Comrie, A. and D. Adams (1997): "The North American Monsoon." Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 78(10), 2197-2213. Comrie, A. C. and B. Broyles (2001): "Variability and SpaComrie, tial Modeling of Fine-scale Precipitation Data for the Sonoran Desert of Southwest Arizona." Journal of Arid Environments, in press. Comrie, A. and E. Glenn (1998): "Principal ComponentsA., based Regionalization of Precipitation Regimes Across the Southwest United States and Northern Mexico, with an Application to Monsoon Precipitation Variability." Climate Research 10, 201-15. C o r d e i r o , N., L. Duckstein, and O. Parent (1996): "Multicriterion Design of Long-Term Water Supply in Southern France." ASCE Journal of Water Resource Planning and Management 122(6), 403-13. Cory, D. (1997): "Potentially Polluting Activities and the Control of Environmental Risk: The Arizona Approach to Aquifer Protection." Initiative 8(1), 5-11.
D., Cory, D. M. Livingston, and H. Northrop (2001): "Agricultural Contamination of Arizona Groundwater: The Case Against Liability Without Fault." Southwestern Journal of Economics, in press. Cor y, D., and M. Moy (1995): "Reauthorization of the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Viability of Rural Public Water Systems." Community Development Issues 3, 1-7. C., Cox, J. C and R. L. Oaxaca (1992a): "Direct Tests of the R. Reservation Wage Property." Economic Journal 102(415, November), 1423-32. C., Cox, J. C and R. L. Oaxaca (1992b): "Tests for a ReserR. vation Wage Effect." Decision Making Under Risk and Uncertainty: New Models and Empirical Findings. (ed: J. Geweke) Boston, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 171-7. C., Cox, J. C and R. L. Oaxaca (1992c): "Theory and MisR. behavior of First Price Auctions: Comment." American Economic Review 82, 1392-1412. L. Craddock, S. L (2000): City of Plagues: Disease, Poverty, and Deviance in San Francisco. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. Daniels, S. E., and G. B. Walker (2001): Working Through Walk G. Environmental Conflict: The Collaborative Learning Approach, Westport, CT: Praeger. Demchak, C. C. (1993): Book Review of War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. Armed Forces and Society 19(4), 625-7. Demchak, C. C. (1994): "Colonies or Computers: Modernization and Organizational Challenges to the Future British Army." Defense Analysis 10(1), 3-32. Demchak, C. C. (1995a): "Coping, Copying, and ConDemchak, centrating: Organizational Learning and Modernization in Militaries (Case Study of Israel, Germany, and Britain)." Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 5(3), 345-76. C. Demchak, C. C (1995b): "Modernizing Militaries and Political Control in Central Europe." Journal of Public Policy 15(2) 111-52. Douglass, W., and L. Smith-Lovin (1992): "An Affect ConSmithtrol Analysis of Two Religious Groups." Social Perspectives in Emotions, Vol. 1 (eds: V. Gecas and D. Franks), Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. Duckstein, L., J. Eberhardt, and J. Rassam (1996): "Operation and Management of the Lake Ontario-St. Lawrence River System: Present and Future Options." Transboundary Water Resources Management: Institutional and Engineering Approaches. 2d ed. Vol. 7. (eds: J. Ganoulis, L. Duckstein, P. Literathy, and I. Bogardi) Heidelberg, Germany: NATO ASI.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
L., Duckstein, L. B. Shrestha, and M. Waterstone (1996): "Policy and Engineering Decision-making under Global Change: Case of the Upper Rio Grande River Basin." Riskbased Decision-making in Water Resources. Vol. VII. (eds: Y. Haimes, D. Moser, and E. Stakhiv) New York, New York: ASCE Press. Eaton, R. (2000): "Temple Desecration in Pre-Modern India." Frontline, India's National Magazine 17(25), 62-70 and 17(26), 70-77. Eldenburg, L., and S. Kallapur (1997): "Changes in Hospital Service Mix and Cost Allocation in Response to Changes in Medicare Reimbursement Schemes." Journal of Accounting and Economics 23, 31-51. Eldenburg, L., and S. Kallapur (2000): "The Effects of Changes in Cost Allocations on the Assessment of Cost Containment Regulation in Hospitals." Journal of Accounting and Public Policy 19(1), 97-112. P. England, P. (1992): Comparable Worth: Theories and Evidence. New York, NY: Aldine de Gruyter. Friedman, D. (1995): Towards a Structure of Indifference: The Social Origins of Maternal Custody. New York, NY: Aldine de Gruyter. Gibbs, D. N. (2000a): "Is There Room for the Real World in the Postmodernist Universe?" Beyond the Area Studies Wars: Toward a New International Studies (ed: N. Waters), Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. Gibbs, D. N. (2000b): "Realpolitik and Humanitarian Intervention: The Case of Somalia." International Politics 37(1), 41-55. Gibbs, D. N. (2000c): "The United Nations, International Peacekeeping, and the Question of `Impartiality': Revisiting the Congo Operation." Journal of Modern African Studies 38(3), 359-82. Gibbs, D. N. (2001): "Inter-Core Rivalries, U.S. Predominance, and the Logic of Interventionism." Monthly Review, in press. Glavac, S., G. Mulligan and A. Vias (1999): "Initial DiagG. nostics of a Regional Adjustment Model." Environment and Planning A 31, 855-76. Glavac, S., A. Vias, and G. Mulligan (1998): "Population G. and Employment Interactions in the Growth of the United States Micropolitan Centers." Urban Geography 19, 63256. Goldman, A. I. (1999): Knowledge in a Social World. Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press. G r a u m l i c h , L. (1997): "Dynamics of Land Use/Cover Change: International Workshop on Dynamics of Land Use/ Land Cover Change in the Hindu Kush-Himalaya." Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 89, 289-90.
Gutek, B. A. (1995a): "Comment: The Biological Clock Confronts Complex Organizations." Journal of Management Inquiry 4(1), 66-8. Gutek, B. A. (1995b): "How Subjective is Sexual Harassment?" Basic and Applied Social Psychology 17(4), 447-67. Gutek, B. A. (1996a): "Sex Roles," "Women at Work," " Women Managers," "Sexual Harassment," and "Sex Differences." Blackwell Dictionary of Organizational Behavior (ed: N. Nicholson), Oxford, U.K.: Blackwell. Gutek, B. A. (1996b): "Sexual Harassment at Work: When an Organization Fails to Respond." Sexual Harassment in the Workplace (ed: M. Stockdale), Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. A., Gutek, B. A. A. G. Cohen, and A. Tsui (1996): "Reactions to Perceived Discrimination." Human Relations 49(6), 791-814. Gutek, B. A., and M. O'Connor (1995): "The Empirical Basis for the Reasonable Woman Standard." Journal of Social Issues, 51(1), 151-166. Gutek, B. A. M. O'Connor, and R. Melançon (1996): ConB. A., versation Hour: The Reasonable Woman Standard in Sexual Harassment Claims. San Diego, CA: Society for Industrial & Organizational Psychology. A., Gutek, B. A. M. O'Connor, R. Melançon, M. Stockdale, T.M. Geer, and R.S. Done (1999): "The Utility of the Reasonable Woman Standard in Hostile Environment Sexual Harassment Cases: A Multimethod, Multistudy Examination." Psychology, Public Policy and the Law. (Special Issue on Sexual Harassment, eds: R. Wiener and B. Gutek.) 5(3), 596-629. Henderson, R. C. (1993): "Tort Reform, Separation of Powers, and the Arizona Constitutional Convention of 1910." Arizona Law Review 35(3), 535-619. P. Herber, B. P. (1992): "The Economic Case for an Antarctic World Park in Light of Recent Policy Developments." Polar Record 28(167), 293-300. P., Herber, B. P., and J. T. Raga (1995): "An International Carbon Tax to Combat Global Warming: An Economic and Political Analysis of the European Union Proposal." American Journal of Economics and Sociology 54(3), 257-267. Innes, R., and D. Cory (2001): "The Economics of Safe D. Drinking Water." Land Economics 77(1), 94-117. Jakobsen, J. R. (1995): "Deconstructing the Paradox of Modernity: Feminism, Enlightenment, and Cross-Cultural Moral Interactions." Journal of Religious Ethics 23(2), 33363.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Jakobsen, J. R. (1997): "The Gendered Division of Moral Labor: Radical Relationalism and Feminist Ethics." Living Responsibly in Community: Essays in Honor of E. Clinton Gardner. (ed: F. Glennon) Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 21-43. Jakobsen, J. R. (1998): Working Alliances and the Politics of Difference: Divinity and Feminist Ethics. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. R., Jakobsen, J. R and B. Seckiyer (1997): "Love, Death, and Videotape: Silverlake Life." Between the Sheets, In the Streets: Queer/Lesbian/Gay Documentary. (eds: C. Fuchs, and C. Holmlund) Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 144-157. Kirby, A. (1993): Power/Resistance: Local Politics and the Chaotic State. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. Kirby, A. (1999): "Love Thy Neighbor?" The Road Map to War. (ed: Diehl, P ) Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt. . K., W. Powell Koput, K. W. W. Powell, and Laurel Smith-Doerr (1997): "Strategies of Learning and Industry Structure: The Evolution of Networks in Biotechnology." Advances in Strategic Management Research (ed: A. Huff) Volume 14, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 229-254. Lehrer, K. (1993): "A Mathematical Model for Resolving Conflict." Initiative 5(2), 1-2, 11-13. Lehrer, K. (1995): "Attendibilitia e Consenso." Esperienza e Conoscenza, 175-186. Lehrer, K. (1997a): "Consensus, Negotiation, and Mediation." Consensus Under Fuzziness. (eds: J. Kacprzyk, H. Nurmi, and M. Ferrizzi) Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic Publishers. Lehrer, K. (1997b): Self-Trust: A Study of Reason, Knowledge and Autonomy. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press. Leones, J., B. Colby D. Cory, and L. Ryan (1997): "MeaColby, D. Cory suring Regional Economic Impacts of Steamflow Depletions." Water Resources Research 33(4), 831-8. Leslie, L. (1996): Research Related Revenues and Undergraduate Education in Public Research University SME Units. Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation. L., L e s l i e , L. G. T. McClure and R . L. Oaxaca (2000): R. " Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering: A Life Sequence Analysis." Journal of Higher Education 69 (3), 239+. L. Oaxaca Leslie, L. L., and R. L O a x a c a (1998): "Women and Leslie, Minorities in Higher Education." Higher Education: Handbook of Theory and Research, Vol. XIII. Bronx, NY: Agathon Press.
Leslie, L. L., and S. A. Slaughter (1997): "The Development and Current Status of Market Mechanisms in U.S. Postsecondary Institutions." Higher Education Policy 10(3/ 4), 239-52. Livingston, M. L., and D. C. Cory (1998): "Agricultural Cory D. Nitrate Contamination of Groundwater: An Evaluation of Environmental Policy." Journal of the American Water Resources Association 34(6), 1311-17. Manber, R., B. Sales and L. Rohman (1992): "Social SciB. Sales, ence Research and Child Custody Decision-making." Applied and Preventive Psychology: Current Scientific Perspectives 1, 23-40. Marston, S. (1993): "Citizen Action Programs and Participatory Politics in Tucson." Public Policy for Democracy. (eds: H. Ingram and S. R. Smith) Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution. S., Marston, S. and G. Towers (1993): "Private Spaces and the Politics of Places: Community Responses to Economic and Spatial Restructuring in Tucson and El Paso." Mobilizing the Community. (eds: R. Fisher and J. Kling) Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications. Mathieu, D. (1995): "Mandating Treatment for Pregnant Substance Abusers: A Compromise." Politics and The Life Sciences 12(2), 199-208. D., Mathieu, D. section ed. (1996a): Encyclopedia of U.S. Biomedical Policy. (eds: R. Blank and J. Mericle) Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Mathieu, D. (1996b): Preventing Prenatal Harm: Should the State Intervene? 2d ed., Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. Morrill, C. (2001): "Institutional Change Through Interstitial Emergence: The Growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution in American Law, 1965-1995." How Institutions Change. (eds: W. Powell and D. Jones) Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Morrill, C., M. Adelman, C. Bejarano, and M. Musheno, C., and C. Yalda (2000): "Telling Tales in School: Youth Culture and Conflict." Law and Society Review 34, 521-66. Morrill, C., D. B. Buller, M. K. Buller, and L. K. Larkey (1999): "Toward an Organizational Perspective on Identifying and Managing Formal Gatekeepers." Qualitative Sociology 22(1), 51-72. C., Morrill, C. T. Harrison, and M. Johnson, (1998): "Voice and Context in Simulated Everyday Legal Discourse: The Influence of Sex Differences and Social Ties." Law and Society Review 32(3), 639-65.
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Udall Center Fellows Program: A Decade of Policy Scholarship, 1990-2001
Morrill, C., and J. Owen-Smith (2001): "The Rise of Environmental Conflict Resolution: Subversive Stories, Institution Building, and the Construction of Fields." Organizations, Policy, and the Natural Environment: Institutional a n d Strategic Perspectives (eds: A. Hoffman and M. Ventresca), Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. C., D. Snow, Morrill, C. D. A. Snow and C. H. White, eds. (2000): Relational Ethnography: Personal Relationships in Personal Contexts. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. National Research Council (B. Colby co-author) (1992): B. Colby, Water Transfers in the West: Efficiency, Equity and the Environment. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Nichols, R. L. (1998): Indians in the United States and Canada: A Comparative History. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. Ozelkan, E., and L. Duckstein (1996): "Analyzing Water L. Resources Alternatives and Handling Criteria by Multi Criterion Decision Techniques." Journal of Environmental Management 48(1), 69-96. Perrin, G., and B. Sales (1993): "Artificial Legal Standards B. in Mental/Emotional Injury Litigation." Behavioral Sciences and the Law 11, 193-203. W. Powell, W. (1996): "Interorganizational Collaboration in the Biotechnology Industry." Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 120, 197-215. W., Powell, W., and E. Clemens, eds. (1998): Private Action Clemens, and the Public Good. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Provan, K. G and L. M. Powers Carson (2000): "BehavK. G., ioral Health Funding for Native Americans in Arizona: Policy Implications for States and Tribes." The Journal of Behavioral Health Services and Research 27(1), 17-28. Rapoport, A. (1995): "Bargaining Behavior in a Bilateral Monopoly with One-sided Incomplete Information." Management Science 41, 377-94. Rapoport, A., and M. A. Fuller (1995): "Bidding Strategies in a Bilateral Monopoly with Two-Sided Incomplete Information." Journal of Mathematical Psychology 39, 17996. A., Rapoport, A. and J. A. Sundali (1996): "Ultimatums in Two-person Bargaining with One-sided Uncertainty: Offer Games." International Journal of Game Theory 25, 47594. A., Rapoport, A. J. A. Sundali, and D. A. Seale (1996): "Ultimatums in Two-person Bargaining with One-sided Uncertainty: Demand Games." Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 30, 173-96. Rhoades, G. (1996): "Reorganizing the Faculty Workforce for Flexibility: Part-time Professional Labor." The Journal of Higher Education 67(6), 624-59.
Rhoades, G. (1998): Managed Professionals: Unionized Faculty and Restructuring Academic Labor. New York, NY: SUNY Press. Rhoades, G., and S. Slaughter (1996): "The Emergence S. of a Competitiveness Research and Development Policy Coalition and the Commercialization of Academic Science and Technology." Science, Technology, and Human Values 21, 303-39. Robinson, D. T., and L. Smith-Lovin (1992): "Selective Smith-Lovin Interaction As a Strategy for Identity Maintenance: An Affect Controls Model." Social Psychology Quarterly 55, 1228. Robinson, D. T., L. Smith-Lovin, and Olga Tsoudis (1994): Smith-Lovin, "Heinous Crime or Unfortunate Accident: The Effects of Remorse on Responses to Mock Criminal Confessions." Social Forces 73(1), 175-90. Sales, B. and L. Simon (1993): "Institutional Constraints on the Ethics of Expert Testimony." Ethics and Behavior, Special Issue, 3, 3-4. Sales, B., and A. Wursten (1992): "Use of Psychologists Sales, and Psychological Research in Legislative Decision-making on Public Interest Matters." Handbook of Psychology and Law (eds: D. K. Kagehiro and W. S. Laufer). New York, NY: Springer-Verlag. Schaller, M. (1993): "Changing American Strategic and Political Views of China, Japan, and Southeast Asia, 19451950." The United States and the Asia Pacific Region in the Twentieth Century, Beijing, China: Chinese Association of American Studies/Institute of American Studies. Schaller, M. (1994a): "Becoming Equals: The U.S. and Japan in the 1960s." Diplomacy in the Crucial Decade (ed. D. Kunz), New York, NY: Columbia University Press. Schaller, M. (1994b): "Douglas MacArthur: The China Issue, Policy, Conflict and the Korean War." Korea and the Cold War (eds: K. Chull Baum and James I. Matray), Claremont, CA: Regina Books. Schaller, M. (1997): Altered States: The United States and Japan Since the Occupation. New York, NY: Oxford Press. M., Schaller, M. V. Scharff, and R. Schulzinger (1998): Coming of Age: The United States in the 20th Century, Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. Schmidtz, D. (1998): "Are All Species Equal?" Journal of Applied Philosophy, 15, 57-67. Schmidtz, D. (1999): "Review Essay: Environmentalism in Economics and Philosophy." Economics and Philosophy 15, 152-59. Schmidtz, D. (2000): "Natural Enemies: An Anatomy of Environmental Conflict." Environmental Ethics 22, 397408.
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Schwarz, J. E. (1997): Illusions of Opportunity: The American Dream in Question. New York, NY: W. W. Norton. Schwarz, J. E. (1998): "The Hidden Side of the Clinton Economy." The Atlantic Monthly (October), 18-21. Seale, D. A., A. Rapoport , and D. V. Budescu (1995): A. Rapoport "Decision Making Under Strict Uncertainty: An Experimental Test of Competitive Criteria." Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 64, 65-75. Sheehan, M., and E. H Zube (1994): "Desert Riparian H. Areas: Landscape Perceptions and Attitudes." Environmental Management 18(3), 413-21. T. Sheridan, T. E. (2001): "Cows, Condos, and the Contested Commons: The Political Ecology of Ranching on the Arizona-Sonora Borderlands." Journal of the Society for Applied Anthropology 60(2), 141-52. W. Shuttleworth, W. J. (1999): "New Worldwide Hydrological Initiative Needed." American Geophysical Union, 80(9), 103. Slaughter, S. (1998): "Federal Policy and Supply-Side Institutional Resource Allocation at Public Research Universities." The Review of Higher Education 21(3), 209-44. A., Slaughter, S. A and L. L. Leslie (1997): Academic Capitalism: Politics, Policies, and the Entrepreneurial University. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Slaughter, S., and G. Rhoades (1997): "Academic CapiS., talism, Managed Professionals, and Supply-side Higher Education." Social Text 15(2), 9-38. Smith, C. D. (1999): Book Review of Empires of the Sand: The Struggle for Mastery in the Middle East, 1789-1923, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 32, 559-565. Smith-Lovin, L. (1992): "An Affect Control View of Cognition and Emotion." Self and Society: A Social Cognition Approach (eds: J. Howard and P Callero), Cambridge, U.K.: . Cambridge University Press. Smith-Lovin, L., and O. Tsoudis (1998): "How Bad Was It? Identity and Emotion Display in Mock Jury Deliberations." Social Forces 77, 695-722. Sprouse, T., and D. C. Cor y (1997): "Regulation and LiCory D. ability in the Control of Environmental Risk: Aquifer Protection in the Santa Cruz Active Management Area." The Environmental Law Forum (Spring), 1-3, 7, 28-29. Sprouse, T., D. C. Cory, and Robert Varady (1996): "AquiCory D. fer Contamination and Safe Drinking Water: The Recent Santa Cruz County Experience." Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest 26, 1-3,7,28-29.
Sundali, J. A., A. Rapoport and D. A Seale (1995): "CoA. Rapoport, ordination in Market Entry Games with Symmetric Players." Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 64, 203-18. Walker, G. B. (2001): "Working Through Environmental Conflicts: Citizens' View of Collaboration." Proceedings of the 6th Biennial Conference on Communication and the Environment (eds: B. Short and D. Hardy-Short), Flagstaff, AZ: Northern Arizona University School of Communication. Walker, G. B., and S. E. Daniels (2001): "Natural Resource Policy and the Paradox of Public Involvement: Bringing Scientists and Citizens Together." Journal of Sustainable Forestry 13. Wang, M. L., K. Lansey and D. Yakowitz (2001): "An ApK. Lansey, proximate Method for Solving Stochastic Two-Stage Programming Problems." Engineering Optimization 33(3), 279302. Weiner, D. R. (1992): "Demythologizing Environmentalism." Journal of the History of Biology 25(3), 385411. Weiner, D. R. (1999): A Little Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection From Stalin to Gorbachev, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Wiener, R., and B. A. Gutek (1999): "Introduction." B. Psychology, Public Policy and the Law. (Special Issue on Sexual Harassment, eds.: R. Wiener and B. Gutek) 5(3), 507-18. S., Wilfond, B. S. K. Rothenberg, E. Thomson, and C. Lerman, on behalf of the Cancer Genetic Consortium, National Institutes of Health (1997): "Cancer Genetic Susceptibility Testing: Ethical and Health Implications for Future Research and Clinical Practice." Journal of Law Medicine and Ethics 25, 243-51. Wilkins, D. (2000): Indigenous Politics and the American Political System, Boulder, CO: Rowan and Littlefield Publishers. Zube, E. H. (1995a): "Greenways and the US National Park System." Landscape and Urban Planning 33(1), 1725. Zube, E. H. (1995b): "No Park Is An Island." Expanding Partnerships in Conservation (ed: J. McNeely), Gland, Switzerland: IUCN. Zube, E. H. (1996): "Management In National Parks: From Science to Scenery." Science and Ecosystem Management in National Parks (eds: G. Davis, and M. Halvorson), Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press.
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ISBN 1-931143-15-3